Ch4 + 5o2 ------> co2 + 2h2o +302
If you are referring to a Bunsen burner, used in laboratories to heat chemicals, it was named for it's inventor- Robert Bunsen. See link at bottom of page.
Methane + oxygen gas ------> carbon dioxide and water(CH4 + 2 02 ------> C02 + 2 H20 )
Caesium was first identified in 1860 by Robert Bunsen (of Bunsen burner fame), and Gustav Kirchhoff (of electrical circuits fame), in the course of studying flame photometry. [This same pair also discovered rubidium.]Caesium was named after the Latin word for blue, its flame colour. This metal melts below body temperature at 28.4oC. It also has some nasty radionuclides.
If you decompose water by electrolysis, you reverse the equation
There is no word equation, except that helium will exist as liquid phase in liquid helium
The word Bunsen burner is spelled with the capital letter B because the device is named after Robert Bunsen, the scientist who suggested the design principles for a gas laboratory heating device.
If you are referring to a Bunsen burner, used in laboratories to heat chemicals, it was named for it's inventor- Robert Bunsen. See link at bottom of page.
Methane + oxygen gas ------> carbon dioxide and water(CH4 + 2 02 ------> C02 + 2 H20 )
Caesium was first identified in 1860 by Robert Bunsen (of Bunsen burner fame), and Gustav Kirchhoff (of electrical circuits fame), in the course of studying flame photometry. [This same pair also discovered rubidium.]Caesium was named after the Latin word for blue, its flame colour. This metal melts below body temperature at 28.4oC. It also has some nasty radionuclides.
Classroom is a closed compound word.
Yes.
Another word for closed circuit is a loop.
You have to heat the pan to make pancakes. The heat index is higher today because the air is also very humid. Warm tropical waters provide the heat energy that powers a hurricane. A bunsen burner is used to provide heat in science experiments.
Yes, loft is a closed syllable word.
The word 'closed' has one syllable.
Both closed.
Photo is an open syllable word.